Advertisement
Advertisement
Coca-Cola
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
A Coca Cola sign is seen as Coke products are on display in a store as the company announces plans to cut 1200 corporate staff jobs. The announced changes come as the company battles a slide in soda sales which along with higher costs has lead to a 20 per cent drop in quarterly profit. Photo: AFP

Coca-Cola to slash 1,200 jobs as demand for sugary drinks sink

Coca-Cola

Coca-Cola plans to cut 1,200 jobs as it deepens its cost-cutting initiatives in response to sluggish soda sales, the company said Tuesday.

The maker of Sprite and Fanta announced the job cuts as it reported lower second-quarter profits due to restructuring costs and flat sales amid efforts to tout new low-sugar beverages in response to flagging demand for soda.

The job cuts account for about one per cent of the soda giant’s 100,300 employees. Coca-Cola said it also is expanding its cost-cutting programme to reach US$800 million annually by 2019.

While the job cuts “will clearly be difficult for those impacted, these changes are critical for us to create an environment where we can accelerate growth and become the consumer-centric, total beverage company we need to be in a fast-changing world,” incoming chief executive James Quincey said in a statement.

Bottles of Coca Cola products at a store in Washington,DC. Coca-Cola reported it will cut 1,200 jobs due to low sales and flat volumes as it touts new low-sugar beverages in response to flagging demand for soda. Photo: AFP

Net income in the first quarter plunged to US$1.2 billion, down 20.3 per cent from the year-ago period.

Revenues fell 11.3 per cent to US$9.1 billion, reflecting lower sales from bottlers that were sold to franchisees as part of a corporate reorganisation.

One-time costs associated with the bottling refranchising also dented earnings.

Volumes were flat globally, including in North America, the biggest region by revenue, and fell three per cent in Latin America due to weakness in Brazil and Venezuela.

Coca-Cola aims to deliver a “more consumer-centric portfolio that meets people’s changing tastes and preferences,” said Quincey, who will become chief executive next month.

New product offerings include “Honest Sport,” a sports drink that is an offshoot of the low-sugar Honest Tea. The company also is launching Coca-Cola Plus in Japan, a no-sugar drink with dietary fibre aimed at Japan’s large ageing population.

“Importantly, these portfolio changes will help our consumers moderate the amount of added sugar they consume.”

Post